The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
Annals from A.D. 881 to A.D. 898
A.D. 881.
This year went the army higher up into Frankland, and the
Franks fought with them; and there was the army horsed after
the battle.
A.D. 882.
This year went the army up along the Maese far into
Frankland, and there sat a year; and the same year went King
Alfred out to sea with a fleet; and fought with four
ship-rovers of the Danes, and took two of their ships;
wherein all the men were slain; and the other two
surrendered; but the men were severely cut and wounded ere
they surrendered.
A.D. 883.
This year went the army up the Scheldt to Conde, and there
sat a year. And Pope Marinus sent King Alfred the "lignum
Domini". The same year led Sighelm and Athelstan to Rome the
alms which King Alfred ordered thither, and also in India to
St. Thomas and to St. Bartholomew. Then they sat against the
army at London; and there, with the favour of God, they were
very successful after the performance of their vows.
A.D. 884.
This year went the army up the Somne to Amiens, and there
remained a year. This year died the benevolent Bishop
Athelwold.
A.D. 885.
This year separated the before-mentioned army in two; one
part east, another to Rochester. This city they surrounded,
and wrought another fortress around themselves. The people,
however, defended the city, until King Alfred came out with
his army. Then went the enemy to their ships, and forsook
their work. There were they provided with horses; and soon
after, in the same summer, they went over sea again. The
same year sent King Alfred a fleet from Kent into
East-Anglia. As soon as they came to Stourmouth, there met
them sixteen ships of the pirates. And they fought with
them, took all the ships, and slew the men. As they returned
homeward with their booty, they met a large fleet of the
pirates, and fought with them the same day; but the Danes
had the victory. The same year, ere midwinter, died Charles,
king of the Franks. He was slain by a boar; and one year
before his brother died, who had also the Western kingdom.
They were both the sons of Louis, who also had the Western
kingdom, and died the same year that the sun was eclipsed.
He was the son of that Charles whose daughter Ethelwulf,
king of the West-Saxons, had to wife. And the same year
collected a great fleet against Old-Saxony; and there was a
great fight twice in the year, and the Saxons had the
victory. There were the Frieslanders with them. And the same
year succeeded Charles to the Western kingdom, and to all
the territory this side of the Mediterranean and beyond, as
his great-grandfather held it, except the Lidwiccians. The
said Charles was the son of Louis, who was the brother of
that Charles who was the father of Judith, whom Ethelwulf,
king of the West-Saxons, married. They were the sons of
Louis, who was the son of the elder Charles, who was the son
of Pepin. The same year died the good Pope Martin, who freed
the English school at the request of Alfred, king of the
West-Saxons. And he sent him great gifts in relics, and a
part of the rood on which Christ suffered. And the same year
the army in East-Anglia brake the truce with King
Alfred.
A.D. 886.
This year went the army back again to the west, that before
were bent eastward; and proceeding upwards along the Seine,
fixed their winter-quarters in the city of Paris.36
The same year also King Alfred fortified the city of London;
and the whole English nation turned to him, except that part
of it which was held captive by the Danes. He then committed
the city to the care of Alderman Ethered, to hold it under
him.
A.D. 887.
This year the army advanced beyond the bridge at
Paris;37 and then
upwards, along the Seine, to the Marne. Then upwards on the
Marne as far as Chezy; and in their two stations, there and
on the Yonne, they abode two winters. This same year died
Charles, king of the Franks. Arnulf, his brother's son, had
six weeks before his death bereft him of his kingdom; which
was now divided into five portions, and five kings were
consecrated thereto. This, however, was done with the
consent of Arnulf; and they agreed that they should hold in
subjection to him; because none of them had by birth any
claim on the father's side, except him alone. Arnulf,
therefore, dwelt in the country eastward of the Rhine;
Rodulf took to the middle district; Oda to the western;
whilst Berenger and Witha became masters of Lombardy and the
Cisalpine territory. But they held their dominion in great
discord; fought two general battles, and frequently overran
the country in partial encounters, displacing each other
several times. The same year also, in which the Danish army
advanced beyond the bridge at Paris, Alderman Ethelhelm led
the alms of the West-Saxons and of King Alfred to Rome.
A.D. 888.
This year Alderman Beeke conducted the alms of the
West-Saxons and of King Alfred to Rome; but Queen
Ethelswith, who was the sister of King Alfred, died on the
way to Rome; and her body lies at Pavia. The same year also
Ethered, Archbishop of Canterbury and Alderman Ethelwold,
died in one month.
A.D. 889.
This year there was no journey to Rome; except that King
Alfred sent two messengers with letters.
A.D. 890.
This year Abbot Bernhelm conducted the alms of the
West-Saxons and of King Alfred to Rome; and Guthrum, king of
the Northern men, departed this life, whose baptismal name
was Athelstan. He was the godson of King Alfred; and he
abode among the East-Angles, where he first established a
settlement. The same year also went the army from the Seine
to Saint Lo, which is between the Bretons and the Franks;
where the Bretons fought with them, obtained the victory,
and drove them out into a river, in which many of them were
drowned. This year also was Plegmund chosen by God and all
his saints to the archbishopric in Canterbury.
A.D. 891.
This year went the army eastward; and King Arnulf fought
with the land-force, ere the ships arrived, in conjunction
with the eastern Franks, and Saxons, and Bavarians, and put
them to flight. And three Scots came to King Alfred in a
boat without any oars from Ireland; whence they stole away,
because they would live in a state of pilgrimage, for the
love of God, they recked not where. The boat in which they
came was made of two hides and a half; and they took with
them provisions for seven nights; and within seven nights
they came to land in Cornwall, and soon after went to King
Alfred. They were thus named: Dubslane, and Macbeth, and
Maelinmun. And Swinney, the best teacher that was among the
Scots, departed this life. And the same year after Easter,
about the gang-days or before, appeared the star that men in
book-Latin call "cometa": some men say that in English it
may be termed "hairy star"; for that there standeth off from
it a long gleam of light, whilom on one side, whilom on
each.
A.D. 893.
This year went the large army, that we before spoke about,
back from the eastern district westward to Bologne; and
there were shipped; so that they transported themselves over
at one time with their horses withal. And they came up with
two hundred and fifty ships into the mouth of the Limne,
which is in East-Kent, at the east end of the vast wood that
we call Andred. This wood is in length, east and west, one
hundred and twenty miles, or longer, and thirty miles broad.
The river that we before spoke about lieth out of the weald.
On this river they towed up their ships as far as the weald,
four miles from the mouth outwards; and there destroyed a
fort within the fen, whereon sat a few churls, and which was
hastily wrought. Soon after this came Hasten up with eighty
ships into the mouth of the Thames, and wrought him there a
work at Milton, and the other army at Appledore.
A.D. 894.
This year, that was about twelve months after they had
wrought a work in the eastern district, the Northumbrians
and East-Angles had given oaths to King Alfred, and the
East-Angles six hostages; nevertheless, contrary to the
truce, as oft as the other plunderers went out with all
their army, then went they also, either with them, or in a
separate division. Upon this King Alfred gathered his army,
and advanced, so that he encamped between the two armies at
the highest point he could find defended by wood and by
water, that he might reach either, if they would seek any
field. Then went they forth in quest of the wealds, in
troops and companies, wheresoever the country was
defenceless. But they were also sought after most days by
other companies, either by day or by night, both from the
army and also from the towns. The king had divided his army
into two parts; so that they were always half at home, half
out; besides the men that should maintain the towns. The
army came not all out of their stations more than twice;
once, when they first came to land, ere the forces were
collected, and again, when they wished to depart from their
stations. They had now seized much booty, and would ferry it
northward over Thames into Essex, to meet their ships. But
the army rode before them, fought with them at Farnham,
routed their forces, and there arrested the booty. And they
flew over Thames without any ford, then up by the Colne on
an island. Then the king's forces beset them without as long
as they had food; but they had their time set, and their
meat noted. And the king was advancing thitherwards on his
march with the division that accompanied him. But while he
was advancing thitherwards, the other force was returning
homewards. The Danes, however, still remained behind; for
their king was wounded in the fight, so that they could not
carry him. Then collected together those that dwell in
Northumbria and East-Anglia about a hundred ships, and went
south about; and with some forty more went north about, and
besieged a fort in Devonshire by the north sea; and those
who went south about beset Exeter. When the king heard that,
then went he west towards Exeter with all his force, except
a very considerable part of the eastern army, who advanced
till they came to London; and there being joined by the
citizens and the reinforcements that came from the west,
they went east to Barnfleet. Hasten was there with his gang,
who before were stationed at Milton, and also the main army
had come thither, that sat before in the mouth of the Limne
at Appledore. Hasten had formerly constructed that work at
Barnfleet, and was then gone out on plunder, the main army
being at home. Then came the king's troops, and routed the
enemy, broke down the work, took all that was therein money,
women, and children and brought all to London. And all the
ships they either broke to pieces, or burned, or brought to
London or to Rochester. And Hasten's wife and her two sons
they brought to the king, who returned them to him, because
one of them was his godson, and the other Alderman
Ethered's. They had adopted them ere Hasten came to
Bamfleet; when he had given them hostages and oaths, and the
king had also given him many presents; as he did also then,
when he returned the child and the wife. And as soon as they
came to Bamfleet, and the work was built, then plundered he
in the same quarter of his kingdom that Ethered his compeer
should have held; and at another time he was plundering in
the same district when his work was destroyed. The king then
went westward with the army toward Exeter, as I before said,
and the army had beset the city; but whilst he was gone they
went to their ships. Whilst he was thus busied there with
the army, in the west, the marauding parties were both
gathered together at Shobury in Essex, and there built a
fortress. Then they both went together up by the Thames, and
a great concourse joined them, both from the East-Angles and
from the Northumbrians. They then advanced upward by the
Thames, till they arrived near the Severn. Then they
proceeded upward by the Severn. Meanwhile assembled Alderman
Ethered, Alderman Ethelm, Alderman Ethelnoth, and the king's
thanes, who were employed at home at the works, from every
town east of the Parret, as well as west of Selwood, and
from the parts east and also north of the Thames and west of
the Severn, and also some part of North-Wales. When they
were all collected together, they overtook the rear of the
enemy at Buttington on the banks of the Severn, and there
beset them without on each side in a fortress. When they had
sat there many weeks on both sides of the water, and the
king meanwhile was in Devonshire westward with the naval
force, then were the enemy weighed down with famine. They
had devoured the greater part of their horses; and the rest
had perished with hunger. Then went they out to the men that
sat on the eastern side of the river, and fought with them;
but the Christians had the victory. And there Ordhelm, the
king's thane, was slain; and also many other king's thanes;
and of the Danes there were many slain, and that part of
them that came away escaped only by flight. As soon as they
came into Essex to their fortress, and to their ships, then
gathered the remnant again in East-Anglia and from the
Northumbrians a great force before winter, and having
committed their wives and their ships and their booty to the
East-Angles, they marched on the stretch by day and night,
till they arrived at a western city in Wirheal that is
called Chester. There the army could not overtake them ere
they arrived within the work: they beset the work though,
without, some two days, took all the cattle that was
thereabout, slew the men whom they could overtake without
the work, and all the corn they either burned or consumed
with their horses every evening. That was about a
twelvemonth since they first came hither over sea.
A.D. 895.
Soon after that, in this year, went the army from Wirheal
into North-Wales; for they could not remain there, because
they were stripped both of the cattle and the corn that they
had acquired by plunder. When they went again out of North-
Wales with the booty they had acquired there, they marched
over Northumberland and East-Anglia, so that the king's army
could not reach them till they came into Essex eastward, on
an island that is out at sea, called Mersey. And as the army
returned homeward that had beset Exeter, they went up
plundering in Sussex nigh Chichester; but the townsmen put
them to flight, and slew many hundreds of them, and took
some of their ships. Then, in the same year, before winter,
the Danes, who abode in Mersey, towed their ships up on the
Thames, and thence up the Lea. That was about two years
after that they came hither over sea.
A.D. 896.
This same year wrought the aforesaid army a work by the Lea,
twenty miles above the city of London. Then. in the summer
of this year, went a large party of the citizens. and also
of other folk, and made an attack on the work of the Danes;
but they were there routed, and some four of the king's
thanes were slain. In the harvest afterward the king
encamped close to the city, whilst they reaped their corn,
that the Danes might not deprive them of the crop. Then,
some day, rode the king up by the river; and observed a
place where the river might be obstructed, so that they
could not bring out their ships. And they did so. They
wrought two works on the two sides of the river. And when
they had begun the work, and encamped before it, then
understood the army that they could not bring out their
ships. Whereupon they left them, and went over land, till
they came to Quatbridge by Severn; and there wrought a work.
Then rode the king's army westward after the enemy. And the
men of London fetched the ships; and all that they could not
lead away they broke up; but all that were worthy of capture
they brought into the port of London. And the Danes procured
an asylum for their wives among the East-Angles, ere they
went out of the fort. During the winter they abode at
Quatbridge. That was about three years since they came
hither over sea into the mouth of the Limne.
A.D. 897.
In the summer of this year went the army, some into
East-Anglia, and some into Northumbria; and those that were
penniless got themselves ships, and went south over sea to
the Seine. The enemy had not, thank God. entirely destroyed
the English nation; but they were much more weakened in
these three years by the disease of cattle, and most of all
of men; so that many of the mightiest of the king's thanes.
that were in the land, died within the three years. Of
these. one was Swithulf Bishop of Rochester, Ceolmund
alderman in Kent, Bertulf alderman in Essex, Wulfred
alderman in Hampshire, Elhard Bishop of Dorchester, Eadulf a
king's thane in Sussex, Bernuff governor of Winchester, and
Egulf the king's horse-thane; and many also with them;
though I have named only the men of the highest rank. This
same year the plunderers in East-Anglia and Northumbria
greatly harassed the land of the West-Saxons by piracies on
the southern coast, but most of all by the esks which they
built many years before. Then King Alfred gave orders for
building long ships against the esks, which were full-nigh
twice as long as the others. Some had sixty oars, some more;
and they were both swifter and steadier, and also higher
than the others. They were not shaped either after the
Frisian or the Danish model, but so as he himself thought
that they might be most serviceable. Then, at a certain turn
of this same year, came six of their ships to the Isle of
Wight; and going into Devonshire, they did much mischief
both there and everywhere on the seacoast. Then commanded
the king his men to go out against them with nine of the new
ships, and prevent their escape by the mouth of the river to
the outer sea. Then came they out against them with three
ships, and three others were standing upwards above the
mouth on dry land: for the men were gone off upon shore. Of
the first three ships they took two at the mouth outwards,
and slew the men; the third veered off, but all the men were
slain except five; and they too were severely wounded. Then
came onward those who manned the other ships, which were
also very uneasily situated. Three were stationed on that
side of the deep where the Danish ships were aground, whilst
the others were all on the opposite side; so that none of
them could join the rest; for the water had ebbed many
furlongs from them. Then went the Danes from their three
ships to those other three that were on their side,
be-ebbed; and there they then fought. There were slain
Lucomon, the king's reve, and Wulfheard, a Frieslander; Ebb,
a Frieslander, and Ethelere, a Frieslander; and Ethelferth,
the king's neat-herd; and of all the men, Frieslanders and
English, sixty-two; of the Danes a hundred and twenty. The
tide, however, reached the Danish ships ere the Christians
could shove theirs out; whereupon they rowed them out; but
they were so crippled, that they could not row them beyond
the coast of Sussex: there two of them the sea drove ashore;
and the crew were led to Winchester to the king, who ordered
them to be hanged. The men who escaped in the single ship
came to East-Anglia, severely wounded. This same year were
lost no less than twenty ships, and the men withal, on the
southern coast. Wulfric, the king's horse-thane, who was
also viceroy of Wales, died the same year.
A.D. 898.
This year died Ethelm, alderman of Wiltshire, nine nights
before midsummer; and Heahstan, who was Bishop of
London.
Notes
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36
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For a
more circumstantial account of the Danish or Norman
operations against Paris at this time, the reader
may consult Felibien, "Histoire de la Ville de
Paris", liv. iii. and the authorities cited by him
in the margin. This is that celebrated siege of
Paris minutely described by Abbo, Abbot of Fleury,
in two books of Latin hexameters; which, however
barbarous, contain some curious and authentic
matter relating to the history of that
period.[Back]
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37
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This
bridge was built, or rebuilt on a larger plan than
before, by Charles the Bald, in the year 861, "to
prevent the Danes or Normans (says Felibien) from
making themselves masters of Paris so easily as
they had already done so many times," etc. -- "pour
empescher que les Normans ne se rendissent maistres
de Paris aussi facilement qu'ils l'avoient deja
fait tant de lois," etc. -- Vol. i. p. 91, folio.
It is supposed to be the famous bridge afterwards
called "grand pont" or "pont au change", -- the
most ancient bridge at Paris, and the only one
which existed at this time.[Back]
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The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
851 to 880
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